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AI Crypto Advisor

Free AI crypto advisor for Bitcoin, Ethereum, DeFi tax reporting, wallet security, and portfolio strategy. Navigate IRS crypto rules, staking taxes, and security 24/7.

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Copilots

What Crypto Copilot Does

The Crypto Copilot helps you understand cryptocurrency fundamentals, manage wallet security, navigate DeFi protocols, and handle the notoriously complex tax reporting requirements without paying a crypto-specialized CPA $300 to $500 per hour. Whether you bought $500 of Bitcoin on Coinbase or you are farming yield across five DeFi protocols, this copilot provides clear, jargon-free guidance on technology, security, and compliance.

Crypto tax reporting is where most people need the most help. The IRS treats cryptocurrency as property, not currency, which means every transaction (selling, trading, spending, or converting one crypto to another) is a taxable event. If you bought 0.5 Bitcoin at $30,000 ($15,000 cost basis) and sold it at $60,000 ($30,000 proceeds), you owe capital gains tax on $15,000 of profit. Short-term gains (held less than 12 months) are taxed at your ordinary income rate (up to 37%), while long-term gains (held 12+ months) are taxed at 0%, 15%, or 20% depending on your income bracket. But it gets more complex: every swap on Uniswap, every liquidity pool entry and exit, and every staking reward creates a separate taxable event. The IRS Notice 2014-21 established the foundational framework, and subsequent guidance has expanded reporting requirements significantly.

Wallet security is the second critical area. According to Chainalysis, over $3.8 billion in crypto was stolen through hacks and scams in 2022, and the number has continued to grow. The FBI's Internet Crime Complaint Center reported that cryptocurrency-related fraud losses exceeded $5.6 billion in 2023. The copilot covers hardware wallet setup (Ledger, Trezor), seed phrase management, phishing attack recognition, smart contract approval risks, and the difference between custodial exchanges (Coinbase, Kraken) and self-custody wallets. Unlike traditional banking, there is no FDIC insurance and no customer service number to call if your crypto is stolen.

DeFi (decentralized finance) adds another layer of complexity. Providing liquidity on Uniswap, lending on Aave, staking ETH, or farming on Curve each create different tax obligations. Impermanent loss in liquidity pools, rebasing tokens, wrapped assets, and cross-chain bridges all have unique tax implications that even many CPAs do not understand. The AICPA (American Institute of Certified Public Accountants) has published guidance acknowledging that cryptocurrency tax treatment remains one of the most challenging areas in tax practice. The copilot explains these concepts clearly and helps you track your obligations.

The SEC and CFTC continue to shape the regulatory landscape for crypto assets, and the copilot stays current with these evolving frameworks. For traditional investment questions, the Investment Copilot covers stocks, bonds, and ETFs, while the Tax Copilot handles broader tax filing strategies. For a broader look at how our AI copilots work across all domains, visit our How It Works page.

crypto  - Exchange Fees
crypto - Exchange Fees

Example Conversation

Live Example
You
I bought Bitcoin and Ethereum on Coinbase throughout 2024. I also swapped some ETH for a smaller token on Uniswap. How do I handle taxes for all of this?
Copilot

Let us break this down by transaction type. The IRS classifies crypto transactions into taxable and non-taxable events. First, your Coinbase purchases:

Buying crypto with USD is not a taxable event. You only owe taxes when you sell, trade, or spend the crypto. But you need to track your cost basis (purchase price + any fees) for each buy. Coinbase provides a tax report you can download, but it only covers transactions on their platform. The IRS requires that you report all crypto dispositions on Form 8949.

Your Uniswap swap is a taxable event. When you swapped ETH for another token, the IRS treats that as two transactions:

1

You sold ETH at its fair market value on the date of the swap

2

You bought the new token at that same fair market value (this becomes your cost basis for the new token)

So if you swapped 2 ETH when ETH was worth $3,200 each ($6,400 total), and your original cost basis for those 2 ETH was $5,000, you have a $1,400 capital gain on the ETH sale. Plus you now hold the new token with a $6,400 cost basis. The IRS Revenue Ruling 2019-24 confirmed that crypto-to-crypto swaps are taxable events (the like-kind exchange loophole under Section 1031 does not apply to crypto).

You
I also staked some ETH and earned staking rewards. Are those taxed?
Copilot

Yes. The IRS treats staking rewards as ordinary income at the fair market value on the date you receive them. This is similar to how interest income from a savings account is taxed. The IRS Revenue Ruling 2023-14 specifically addressed staking rewards and confirmed they are taxable as income when received, not when sold.

For example, if you earned 0.1 ETH in staking rewards when ETH was $3,000, you have $300 in ordinary income to report. Your cost basis in that 0.1 ETH is $300 (the value when received). If you later sell it at $3,500, you have an additional $50 capital gain.

The case of Jarrett v. United States initially challenged whether staking rewards should be taxed only when sold, but the IRS subsequently issued Revenue Ruling 2023-14 making clear that staking rewards are taxable upon receipt. This is now settled law.

You
This is overwhelming. What is the simplest way to track all of this?
Copilot

Here is a practical approach:

1

Download exchange reports. Coinbase, Kraken, and other centralized exchanges provide annual tax reports (Form 1099-MISC for rewards over $600, and transaction history CSVs). Starting with tax year 2025, the IRS's broker reporting rules under the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act require exchanges to issue Form 1099-DA for digital asset transactions.

2

Use crypto tax software. Services like Koinly ($49 to $279/year), CoinTracker ($59 to $199/year), or TokenTax ($65 to $3,499/year) can import transactions from exchanges and wallets, track DeFi activity, and generate IRS Form 8949 and Schedule D. The AICPA recommends using dedicated crypto tax software for anyone with more than a handful of transactions.

3

Connect your wallets. For Uniswap and other DeFi transactions, connect your wallet address to the tax software. It reads on-chain transactions automatically.

4

Review and file. The software generates your tax forms. You report crypto on:

- Schedule D: Summary of capital gains and losses

- **Form 8949:** Detailed listing of every sale/trade

- Schedule 1: Staking rewards, mining income, airdrops

- Schedule C: If crypto activities constitute a trade or business

You
Can I offset my gains with losses? I have some tokens that dropped significantly.
Copilot

Yes, and this is a major tax strategy called tax-loss harvesting. If you have unrealized losses, you can sell those positions to realize the loss and offset your gains.

Copilot

The Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act included provisions directing the IRS to apply wash sale rules to cryptocurrency starting in 2025. Previously, crypto was exempt from the 30-day wash sale rule that applies to stocks and securities under IRC Section 1091. Under the new rules, you cannot sell a crypto asset at a loss and repurchase the same asset within 30 days while still claiming the loss deduction. The Treasury Department has issued proposed regulations implementing these requirements. Verify the current status of these rules before executing any tax-loss harvesting strategy.

Example: If you have $5,000 in capital gains from your ETH swap and $3,000 in unrealized losses on another token, selling the losing position reduces your taxable gain to $2,000. If your losses exceed your gains, you can deduct up to $3,000 against ordinary income per year and carry forward the rest indefinitely under IRC Section 1211.

Common Use Cases

Use CaseWhat You GetTypical Professional Cost
Crypto tax reportingForm 8949 preparation, cost basis tracking, income classification$500-$2,000 crypto CPA
Wallet security setupHardware wallet configuration, seed phrase backup, phishing protection$200-$500 security consultation
DeFi tax trackingLiquidity pool, staking, and yield farming tax event identification$1,000-$3,000 specialized CPA
Tax-loss harvestingLoss identification, wash sale awareness, carryforward calculations$300-$800 tax advisor
Airdrop and fork guidanceIncome classification, fair market value determination, reporting$200-$500 per consultation
NFT tax implicationsPurchase, sale, creation, and royalty tax treatment$300-$800 CPA session
Exchange comparisonFee structures, security features, withdrawal limits, insuranceFree but time-intensive research
IRS notice responseCP2000, 6173, 6174 letter analysis and response preparation$500-$2,000 tax attorney

Crypto tax reporting is the most common and highest-value use case because the penalties for non-compliance are severe. The IRS added a mandatory crypto disclosure question to Form 1040 in 2019, and failure to report crypto transactions can result in penalties of 20% to 75% of the tax owed plus interest. The IRS Criminal Investigation division has made cryptocurrency enforcement a priority, and the agency has used blockchain analytics from firms like Chainalysis to identify unreported transactions. The copilot helps you identify all taxable events, classify them correctly (capital gain vs. ordinary income), and calculate your liability accurately.

DeFi tax tracking is the most complex use case. A single liquidity provision on Uniswap generates multiple taxable events: the initial token deposit (potential taxable swap), fee income received, impermanent loss (not directly deductible but affects your cost basis), and the final withdrawal. Multiply this across multiple protocols and chains, and you can have hundreds of taxable events in a single year. The AICPA's Digital Assets Tax Task Force has published practice guides acknowledging the complexity, and even experienced CPAs struggle with DeFi-specific tax treatment. The copilot helps you understand each event type and prepare for filing. For broader tax strategies, the Tax Copilot covers how crypto fits into your overall tax picture.

Wallet security guidance helps prevent losses that no tax deduction can recover. The FBI and CISA (Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency) regularly publish advisories about crypto-targeting malware and social engineering attacks. The copilot covers hardware wallet best practices, explains why you should never store your seed phrase digitally, identifies common phishing patterns, and helps you evaluate the security tradeoffs between centralized exchanges and self-custody. It also explains smart contract approval risks, where granting unlimited token approvals to DeFi protocols can drain your wallet if the contract is compromised.

NFT tax implications are particularly confusing. The IRS proposed regulations (Notice 2023-27) indicated that certain NFTs may be classified as collectibles, subject to a 28% long-term capital gains rate rather than the standard 15% or 20%. NFT creators face additional complexity: minting and selling NFTs generates ordinary business income reportable on Schedule C, and royalties on secondary sales create ongoing income obligations. The copilot clarifies which classification applies to your specific NFTs. For a full overview of all available tools, browse our copilot directory.

crypto  - Market Cap Growth
crypto - Market Cap Growth

How It Works

Step 1: Describe your crypto activity. Tell the copilot which exchanges you use, which tokens you hold, whether you have engaged in DeFi activities (staking, lending, liquidity provision), and what your main concerns are (taxes, security, understanding the technology). Include approximate amounts and holding periods. The copilot uses the IRS's crypto tax framework and SEC guidance to classify your activities properly.

Step 2: Get categorized guidance. The copilot classifies your activities by tax treatment (capital gains, ordinary income, non-taxable events) based on IRS Notice 2014-21, Revenue Ruling 2019-24, and Revenue Ruling 2023-14. It identifies any security vulnerabilities in your current setup. It prioritizes the highest-impact issues, whether that is a $5,000 unrealized tax liability you did not know about or $50,000 sitting on an exchange without two-factor authentication.

Step 3: Build your compliance plan. For tax reporting, the copilot recommends specific tracking tools like Koinly, CoinTracker, or TokenTax, walks you through the forms you need to file (Form 8949, Schedule D, Schedule 1), and helps you identify optimization opportunities like tax-loss harvesting or long-term holding strategies to qualify for lower capital gains rates.

Step 4: Strengthen your security posture. The copilot guides you through setting up a hardware wallet, creating secure seed phrase backups following CISA cybersecurity best practices, revoking unnecessary smart contract approvals, and establishing a security routine for verifying transactions before signing them. It covers the principle of self-custody that the Bitcoin Foundation and crypto security experts advocate: "not your keys, not your coins." Visit our How It Works page to learn more about the technology behind all our copilots.

crypto  - Security Threats
crypto - Security Threats

Why Crypto Copilot Beats ChatGPT

ChatGPT

Tax event classificationGroups everything as "capital gains"
DeFi tax treatmentLimited understanding of DeFi mechanics
Current IRS guidanceOften uses outdated guidance
Cost basis methodsMentions methods without explaining selection
Security practicesGeneric "use a hardware wallet" advice
Tax software recommendationsMentions tools without comparison
Regulatory awarenessNo awareness of regulatory landscape
IRS notice responseCannot help with IRS correspondence

Crypto Copilot

Tax event classificationIdentifies swaps, staking, airdrops, and forks as distinct tax events with IRS citations
DeFi tax treatmentImpermanent loss, LP tokens, rebasing, cross-chain bridges
Current IRS guidance2025 reporting requirements, wash sale rule changes, broker reporting
Cost basis methodsFIFO, LIFO, specific identification with exchange-level detail
Security practicesProtocol-specific risks, smart contract approval management
Tax software recommendationsCompares Koinly, CoinTracker, TokenTax features and pricing
Regulatory awarenessSEC, CFTC, FinCEN, and state-level regulatory developments
IRS notice responseSpecific guidance for CP2000, 6173, 6174 letters

Crypto taxation is one of the fastest-evolving areas of tax law, with new IRS guidance, proposed regulations, and court rulings emerging regularly. The Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act imposed new broker reporting requirements on centralized exchanges. The IRS has expanded wash sale rules to crypto. The case of Jarrett v. United States shaped how staking rewards are taxed. The SEC's enforcement actions against exchanges and token issuers continue to reshape the regulatory environment. Generic AI models trained on older data frequently provide guidance based on superseded rules.

The Crypto Copilot also understands the technical mechanics that drive tax treatment. When you provide liquidity on a decentralized exchange, the LP tokens you receive represent a proportional claim on the pool. The tax treatment of receiving, holding, and redeeming those tokens depends on whether the IRS views the initial deposit as a taxable swap. The AICPA has noted in its practice guidance that DeFi tax treatment requires understanding both the tax code and the underlying smart contract mechanics. These nuances matter and generic AI handles them poorly.

Another critical advantage: regulatory awareness. The SEC, CFTC, and FinCEN each regulate different aspects of cryptocurrency, and understanding which agency's rules apply to your specific activity matters. FinCEN's Travel Rule requirements for crypto transfers, the SEC's securities classification framework (the Howey Test), and CFTC jurisdiction over crypto derivatives all affect how you should approach compliance. See the full comparison across all categories.

crypto  - Tax Rates
crypto - Tax Rates

Who Crypto Copilot Is For

Crypto beginners with basic exchange purchases. If you bought Bitcoin or Ethereum on Coinbase and are not sure how to report it on your taxes, the copilot explains what is taxable, what is not, and exactly which forms to file. The IRS requires crypto disclosure on Form 1040 even if you only made purchases without selling, and the copilot walks you through the correct answer to the digital asset question.

DeFi users with complex transaction histories. If you have interacted with Uniswap, Aave, Curve, Lido, or other DeFi protocols, you likely have dozens to hundreds of taxable events you may not have tracked. The AICPA acknowledges that DeFi tax reporting is among the most complex areas of individual tax compliance. The copilot helps you reconstruct your transaction history and classify each event.

NFT creators and collectors. Creating, buying, selling, and receiving royalties on NFTs each have different tax treatments. The IRS Notice 2023-27 proposed guidance on NFT collectible classification, and the copilot explains how NFTs may be classified as collectibles (at a 28% long-term capital gains rate vs. standard rates) and helps creators track business income and expenses.

Investors worried about wallet security. If you hold significant crypto value and want to move from exchange custody to self-custody, or you want to verify your current security setup is adequate, the copilot walks you through best practices step by step. The CISA and crypto security researchers recommend hardware wallets for holdings above $1,000, and the copilot helps you set up and manage them securely.

Anyone who received an IRS letter about crypto. The IRS has sent over 10,000 letters to crypto holders requesting compliance. If you received a CP2000 (proposed changes to your return), 6173 (request to file an amended return), or 6174 (informational notice about reporting requirements), the copilot helps you understand what the IRS is asking for and how to respond. The Taxpayer Advocate Service can also assist if you need additional help navigating IRS correspondence.

Business owners accepting crypto payments. If your business accepts Bitcoin, Ethereum, or stablecoins as payment, each transaction creates both income tax and potential sales tax obligations. The IRS treats crypto payments received as ordinary business income valued at fair market value on the date received. The copilot helps you set up proper accounting procedures and understand your obligations.

Related Copilots

Tax Copilot - Integrates crypto gains and losses into your overall tax return, covers estimated quarterly payments for large crypto income, and handles amended returns for prior years.

Investment Copilot - Covers traditional portfolio allocation and helps determine what percentage of your portfolio should be in crypto. Most financial experts cited by Morningstar suggest 1% to 5% for most investors.

Budget & Debt Copilot - Helps you determine how much of your income to allocate toward crypto investments while maintaining emergency funds and debt payoff.

Bookkeeping Copilot - For crypto businesses, mining operations, or freelancers paid in crypto who need to track business income and expenses.

Business Finance Copilot - For businesses accepting crypto payments, managing treasury in stablecoins, or exploring blockchain-based financial services.

Explore related guides: tax filing guide, freelance tax scenario, and small business guide. See how we compare to ChatGPT for finance advice. Browse our full copilot directory to find specialized help for any domain.

Pricing and Value

Free Plan: Basic crypto concepts, general tax reporting overview, and introductory wallet security guidance. Includes limited conversations per month. No credit card required.

Pro Plan ($29/month): Unlimited conversations, detailed tax event classification for all crypto activities, DeFi tax tracking guidance, tax-loss harvesting strategies, security audit checklists, IRS notice response assistance, and ongoing regulatory update awareness. Less than the cost of one hour with a crypto-specialized CPA ($300-$500/hour).

Enterprise: Solutions for crypto exchanges, DeFi protocols, accounting firms, and financial institutions needing client-facing crypto education. Contact us for pricing.

The ROI of Crypto Tax Compliance: Crypto tax preparation by a specialized CPA costs $500 to $2,000 for basic exchange activity and $1,000 to $5,000+ for complex DeFi portfolios according to CPA Practice Advisor. Crypto tax software ranges from $49 to $3,499 per year. The IRS penalty for substantial understatement of income is 20% of the additional tax owed, and criminal tax evasion penalties under 26 USC 7201 can include up to 5 years in prison. Making proper reporting far cheaper than the consequences of getting it wrong.

At $29/month, the Pro plan helps you understand your obligations, prepare your records efficiently, and avoid costly compliance mistakes. The IRS Criminal Investigation division has made cryptocurrency enforcement a top priority, and the cost of non-compliance is rising every year. See all options at our pricing page, or get started for free.

Browse all 131 copilots, explore task guides, or find copilots for your industry.

Important Disclaimer

The Crypto Copilot provides general education about cryptocurrency technology, security, and tax reporting. It is not a licensed tax advisor, registered investment advisor, or financial planner. Cryptocurrency is a volatile and speculative asset class. The SEC, CFTC, and IRS continue to issue new guidance that may change the tax treatment or regulatory status of digital assets. Tax treatment of crypto transactions is evolving and subject to new IRS guidance, legislation, and court decisions. Always verify current tax rules with a qualified tax professional before filing. The copilot does not provide investment recommendations or guarantee any financial outcomes. Never invest more than you can afford to lose. For significant crypto holdings, complex DeFi activity, or IRS correspondence, consult a CPA or tax attorney with cryptocurrency expertise. The AICPA maintains a directory of CPAs with digital asset specialization.

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